Are z~5 QSOs found in the most massive high redshift over-densities?
K. Husband, M. N. Bremer, E. R. Stanway, L. J. M. Davies, M. D., Lehnert, L. S. Douglas

TL;DR
This study investigates whether luminous QSOs at z~5 are located in the most massive over-dense regions by analyzing galaxy clustering around these QSOs, revealing that they are typically found in over-dense environments similar to other structures at that redshift.
Contribution
The paper provides the first clustering analysis of Lyman Break Galaxies around z~5 QSOs using spectroscopic data, demonstrating that these QSOs are generally situated in over-dense regions.
Findings
Two of three QSO fields show significant LBG clustering at the QSO redshifts.
QSO environments are over-dense but not more extreme than other high-redshift structures.
Identified structures are consistent with proto-clusters in early formation stages.
Abstract
Luminous high-redshift QSOs are thought to exist within the most massive dark matter haloes in the young Universe. As a consequence they are likely to be markers for biased, over-dense regions where early galaxies cluster, regions that eventually grow into the groups and clusters seen in the lower redshift universe. In this paper we explore the clustering of galaxies around z ~ 5 QSOs as traced by Lyman Break Galaxies (LBGs). We target the fields of three QSOs using the same optical imaging and spectroscopy techniques used in the ESO Remote Galaxy Survey (ERGS, Douglas et al. 2009, 2010), which was successful in identifying individual clustered structures of LBGs. We use the statistics of the redshift clustering in ERGS to show that two of the three fields show significant clustering of LBGs at the QSO redshifts. Neither of these fields is obviously over-dense in LBGs from the imaging…
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